Abstract

Haukisalmi, V., Wickström, L. M., Henttonen, H., Hantula, J. & Gubányi, A. (2004). Molecular and morphological evidence for multiple species within Paranoplocephala omphalodes (Cestoda, Anoplocephalidae) in Microtus voles (Arvicolinae). —Zoologica Scripta, 33, 277–290.The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that the anoplocephalid cestode Paranoplocephala omphalodes (Hermann, 1783), a Holarctic parasite of Microtus voles, is a complex of host‐specific species, rather than a single host‐generalist species, using uni‐ and multivariate morphometrics and DNA sequence data from the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I gene. The phylogenetic methods applied to the mtDNA sequence data showed consistently that the cestodes morphologically recognizable as P. omphalodes include four well‐supported monophyletic groups, representing at least three distinct, largely host‐specific species. Multivariate morphometrics (discriminant analysis) successfully distinguished the four main mtDNA clades of P. omphalodes‐like cestodes. The true P. omphalodes is shown to be a parasite of Microtus arvalis, M. agrestis and Clethrionomys glareolus in Europe. Microtus oeconomus harbours two host‐specific, allopatric and possibly conspecific clades, one with a Holarctic and another with an (eastern) Beringian (Alaskan) distribution. The eastern Beringian endemic M. miurus is also parasitized with a host‐specific, morphologically divergent species of Paranoplocephala. The cestode clades recognized in M. oeconomus and M. miurus represent 2–3 undescribed species. Molecular phylogenetic analyses supported the monophyly of the ‘northern clade’ of Paranoplocephala spp., an assemblage including P. kalelai from Clethrionomys spp., P. macrocephala from Microtus spp. and all clades of P. omphalodes‐like cestodes except those representing the true P. omphalodes from Europe. The intra‐ and interspecific phylogeny within the northern clade is compared tentatively with the known evolutionary history of the hosts.

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